The Philippine Star

Tourist arrivals hit 5-yr high in Feb

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

The tourism sector turned in a record feat in February as internatio­nal arrivals registered the biggest growth rate and volume over the past five years.

Latest data from the Department of Tourism (DOT) showed internatio­nal tourists for February rose 20.4 percent to 549,725 from 456,524 in the same period last year, the highest in the past 62 months.

Receipts from tourism activities surged 42 percent to P27.49 billion in February from the P19.35 billion earnings generated a year ago.

“This unpreceden­ted growth we are now experienci­ng did not happen overnight. In only a few years’ time, we have achieved an enhanced orientatio­n for the DOT as the country’s primary marketing and selling unit. We have restored confidence in the Philippine­s through a profession­al, well-planned, and well-supported tourism industry,” Tourism Secretary Ramon Jimenez Jr. said.

The Philippine­s has recorded a total 1.1 million arrivals and continued double-digit growth since January 2016.

DOT said this reflects the strong performanc­e of the tourism industry with aggressive marketing activities, internatio­nal events held in the country, and increasing awareness of product offerings.

East Asia contribute­d the biggest arrivals in February with 304,052 visitors or more than half (55.3 percent) of total visitor volume.

North America accounted for 15.8 percent of the market with 87,178 while the ASEAN region comprised 7.3 percent contributi­ng 40,498 arrivals. Australia and

the Pacific and Northern Europe registered 4.1 percent each.

Korea remained the top contributo­r of internatio­nal tourists with 284,763 arrivals or a 26 percent share in total inbound traffic.

The US supplied the second biggest inbound arrival with 155,796 visitors while the Chinese market ranked third with a total 130,916 visitors. Meanwhile, Japan provided 92,531 arrivals and Australia recorded 43,712 visitors.

Other top visitor countries include Canada with 36,773 arrivals, Taiwan ( 35,344), Singapore ( 28,376), United Kingdom (28,238) and Malaysia (23,990).

Moreover, Korea provided P13 billion in receipts followed by the US with P2.87 billion. China placed third with P1.71 billion while Japan and Australia contribute­d P1.45 billion and P960 million, respective­ly.

Spending patterns for February showed average daily expenditur­e was at P4,907.47 while average length of stay registered is 10 nights.

For 2016, DOT is looking at an almost 10 percent increase in foreign receipts to over P250 billion and a 13 percent rise in arrivals to reach six million tourists on the back of better air access and added accommodat­ion facilities.

Tourism contribute­s eight percent to the country’s gross domestic product and is the third largest dollar earning industry next to the semiconduc­tor and BPO ( business process outsourcin­g) industries. Its contributi­on is seen to reach 10 to 12 percent in the next three to five years.

 ?? MIKE AMOROSO ?? SM PRIME STOCKHOLDE­RS MEETING: SM Prime Holdings president and chairman Henry Sy Jr. (center) addresses shareholde­rs during the company’s annual meeting held yesterday. Also in photo are SM Prime president Hans Sy (right) and executive vice president Jeffrey Lim.
MIKE AMOROSO SM PRIME STOCKHOLDE­RS MEETING: SM Prime Holdings president and chairman Henry Sy Jr. (center) addresses shareholde­rs during the company’s annual meeting held yesterday. Also in photo are SM Prime president Hans Sy (right) and executive vice president Jeffrey Lim.

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